Behind the Mask

Behind the Mask
Author: Peter Taylor
Publisher:
Total Pages: 484
Release: 1999
Genre: History
ISBN:

Behind the Mask is the most comprehensive investigation available of the rise of the IRA and its political wing, Sinn Fein. Author Peter Taylor has achieved unprecedented access to IRA members and documents, Irish and British soldiers, politicians, and eyewitnesses to The Troubles. From the Easter rising in 1916 to the ceasefire in effect today, the history and politics of the conflict are laid out here with deadly clarity.

The Peace Prescription

The Peace Prescription
Author: Edward Morris Marshall
Publisher: Dr. Ed Marshall
Total Pages: 190
Release: 2009-09
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780615290737

Marshall, a physician and author, details the five steps that can be taken at grass-roots levels in order to prevent wars. One of those keys is the enforcement worldwide of Dr. Marshall's "Peace Law," which makes the serious advocacy or initiation of violence illegal.

Performing the Northern Ireland Peace Process

Performing the Northern Ireland Peace Process
Author: Paul Dixon
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 323
Release: 2018-06-15
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 3319913433

“Performing the Northern Ireland Peace Process offers a nuanced and stimulating analysis which goes beyond standard explanations by exploring the motives and means used by those who made peace in Northern Ireland.” (Professor Timothy White, Xavier University, USA) “Paul Dixon has produced an impressive and challenging book. Dixon defends the Northern Ireland peace process as a carefully-crafted, drawn-out episode in realist, pragmatic politics. However, he pulls few punches in highlighting the moral deceptions which have kept the process in play. Provocatively, Dixon also challenges a wide range of academic interpretations of the processes and their associated political prescriptions. Thoughtful and well-researched throughout, Performing the Northern Ireland Peace Process is an essential read for anyone interested in conflict management.” (Professor Jon Tonge, University of Liverpool) “In this outstanding book, Dixon shows yet again the importance of the theatrical metaphor for Northern Ireland. More importantly still, he demonstrates that the adoption of a critically realist outlook actually enhances our capacity to think creatively about the political choices we face in international politics and the alternative policies and institutions we might construct.” (Professor Adrian Little, The University of Melbourne) This book is exceptional in defending the ‘dirty politics’ of the Northern Ireland peace process. Political actors in Britain, Ireland and the United States performed the peace process and used ‘political skills’, often including deception and hypocrisy, in order to wind down the conflict and achieve accommodation. These political skills, it is argued, are often morally justifiable even as they are popularly condemned. The Northern Ireland peace process has been highly successful in reducing violence and an accurate understanding of its politics is an important contribution to international debates about managing conflict.

Religion, Civil Society, and Peace in Northern Ireland

Religion, Civil Society, and Peace in Northern Ireland
Author: John D. Brewer
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 270
Release: 2011-12
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 0199694028

Religion is traditionally portrayed as nothing but trouble in Ireland, but the churches played a key role in Northern Ireland's peace process. This study challenges many existing assumptions about the peace process, drawing on four years of interviewing with those involved, including church leaders, politicians, and paramilitary members.

Proscribing Peace

Proscribing Peace
Author: Sophie Haspeslagh
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2021-09-07
Genre:
ISBN: 9781526157591

Parties in conflict have labelled opponents for centuries, but Proscribing peace explores how international proscription has solidified such judgments by creating a category that has both symbolic and material ramifications. Sophie Haspeslagh draws on personal interviews and 20 years of statements by successive Colombian governments and the FARC to show how having stigmatized the armed group in such an extreme way, proscription makes it much harder to make peace with them. The branding of armed groups as 'terrorists' post 9/11 created a policy straitjacket for governments making it is more difficult to initiate negotiations with a listed group. This book develops the notion of the 'linguistic ceasefire' to explore how governments that claim they will never negotiate with terrorists end-up doing just that.

Lessons from the Northern Ireland Peace Process

Lessons from the Northern Ireland Peace Process
Author: Timothy J. White
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Pres
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2013
Genre: History
ISBN: 0299297039

This book incorporates recent research that emphasizes the need for civil society and a grassroots approach to peacebuilding while taking into account a variety of perspectives, including neoconservatism and revolutionary analysis. The contributions, which include the reflections of those involved in the negotiation and implementation of the Good Friday Agreement, also provide policy prescriptions for modern conflicts.

The Ex-isle of Erin

The Ex-isle of Erin
Author: Fintan O'Toole
Publisher:
Total Pages: 246
Release: 1997
Genre: History
ISBN:

One of Ireland's most incisive and provocative commentators, Fintan O'Toole explores the new images that are taking the place of the old nationalist folklore.

The Northern Ireland peace process

The Northern Ireland peace process
Author: Eamonn O'Kane
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 365
Release: 2021-08-03
Genre: History
ISBN: 1526116642

This book offers a re-evaluation of the emergence, development and outcome of the peace process in Northern Ireland. Drawing on interviews with many of the key participants of the peace process, newly released archival material and the existing scholarship on the conflict, it explains the decisions that shaped the peace process in their proper context. O'Kane argues that although the outcome of the process can be seen as a success, it is not the outcome that was originally expected or intended by most of its participants. By tracing the process and highlighting the pragmatic decisions of the parties that shaped it the work explains how Northern Ireland moved from conflict to peace. The book concludes by examining what the implications of Brexit are for Northern Ireland’s hard-won peace and political stability.

Peace and Ethnic Identity in Northern Ireland

Peace and Ethnic Identity in Northern Ireland
Author: Henry Jarrett
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 178
Release: 2017-10-16
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1351706632

Consociational power sharing is often perceived to be the method of conflict management that is most likely to succeed in deeply divided societies. The case of Northern Ireland in particular is heralded by many as a consociational success story. Since the signing of the Good Friday (Belfast) Agreement in 1998, significant conflict transformation has taken place in the form of a considerable reduction in levels of violence and the establishment of power sharing between unionists and nationalists. This book looks at what consociational power sharing achieves after its implementation – specifically, whether it can work to overcome existing identities in divided societies, or whether it simply freezes divisions. It argues that if consociational power sharing is facilitating a move towards a genuinely shared society, this would be demonstrated in the focus of the election campaigns of Northern Ireland’s political parties, which would be almost exclusively based around socio-economic issues affecting the whole population, rather than narrow single identity concerns. However, the book claims that, on the whole, this has not been realised. Although election campaigns are today less strident than they were in the pre-1998 era, it remains the case that they usually foreground single identity symbolism, as it is this that resonates with voters. Whilst consociational power sharing has been very successful in reducing levels of violent conflict and facilitating elite level cooperation between unionists and nationalists, it has been much less successful in reducing divisions within wider society to facilitate a genuinely shared Northern Irish identity. By establishing an important middle ground between consociational proponents and critics, this research will be of significant interest to students and scholars of ethnic politics, political sociology, conflict management, and divided societies more generally.